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1.
Nanomicro Lett ; 16(1): 26, 2023 Nov 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37985532

ABSTRACT

Flexible strain sensors are promising in sensing minuscule mechanical signals, and thereby widely used in various advanced fields. However, the effective integration of hypersensitivity and highly selective response into one flexible strain sensor remains a huge challenge. Herein, inspired by the hysteresis strategy of the scorpion slit receptor, a bio-inspired flexible strain sensor (BFSS) with parallel through-slit arrays is designed and fabricated. Specifically, BFSS consists of conductive monolayer graphene and viscoelastic styrene-isoprene-styrene block copolymer. Under the synergistic effect of the bio-inspired slit structures and flexible viscoelastic materials, BFSS can achieve both hypersensitivity and highly selective frequency response. Remarkably, the BFSS exhibits a high gage factor of 657.36, and a precise identification of vibration frequencies at a resolution of 0.2 Hz through undergoing different morphological changes to high-frequency vibration and low-frequency vibration. Moreover, the BFSS possesses a wide frequency detection range (103 Hz) and stable durability (1000 cycles). It can sense and recognize vibration signals with different characteristics, including the frequency, amplitude, and waveform. This work, which turns the hysteresis effect into a "treasure," can provide new design ideas for sensors for potential applications including human-computer interaction and health monitoring of mechanical equipment.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(19): 23103-23112, 2021 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33973761

ABSTRACT

Natural creatures can always provide perfect strategies for excellent antireflection (AR), which is valuable for photovoltaic industry, optical devices, and flexible displays. However, limited by precision, it is still difficult to guarantee the consistency between the artificial structures and the original biological structures. Here, a novel large-scale flexible AR film is inspired by the cicada wings and successfully fabricated with a recycled template. On the one hand, the adjustable structures on porous templates make it possible to optimize the design of AR structure parameters toward the practical demand. On the other hand, it breaks the limitation of the biological organism size, accomplishing the replication of AR nanostructure units in a large scale. Interestingly, even if the film is covered by enlarged dome cone arrays, it still maintains almost perfect AR property, achieving excellent scale-insensitivity AR performance. This work numerically and experimentally investigates its scale-insensitivity AR performance in detail. Compared with subwavelength nanocones, enlarged cones change the original optical behaviors, and the proportion of transmitted light is reduced while scattering and absorption increase. Based on this, these bio-inspired scale-insensitivity AR arrays could be used in flexible displays, photothermic conversion, solar cells, and so on.


Subject(s)
Optics and Photonics , Equipment Design , Light
3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(16): 19450-19459, 2021 Apr 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33871958

ABSTRACT

Antireflective performance is critical for most optical devices, such as the efficient solar energy utilization in photovoltaic cells of an aerospace craft and optical displays of scientific precise equipment. Therein, outstanding broad-band antireflection is one of the most crucial properties for antireflection films (ARFs). Unfortunately, it is still a challenging work to realize perfect "broader-band" antireflection because both the low refractive indices materials and time-consuming nanotexturing technologies are required in the fabricating process. Even in this case, a broader-band and flexible ARF with hierarchical structures is successfully developed, which is inspired by butterfly wing scales. First, the butterfly wings surface is treated with acid and stuck on a clean glass. Now, all the scales on the wings will form a strong adhesion with the glass substrate. Then, the wings are removed and the scales are left on the glass slide. Now the backside of scales is facing outward, the backside structures of the scales are coincidentally used as the template. Finally, the structure is replicated and the ARF with a controllable thickness is successfully fabricated by rotating PDMS on the biological template. In this work, the bionic ARFs realize the transmission of nearly 90% and more than 90% in the visible light and infrared region. It enhanced transmission to 13% under standard illumination compared with flat PDMS films of the same thickness. Furthermore, the ARF is flexible enough that it could bend nearly 180° to meet the special antireflection requirements in some extreme conditions. It is expected that this bioinspired AR film could revolutionize the technologies of broader-band antireflective materials and impact numerous applications from glass displays to optoelectronic devices.

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